Carleton launches a new pathway in the Technology Innovation Management master's program
Carleton University approved a new Master of Entrepreneurship (M.Ent.) in Technology Innovation Management on Friday, Feb. 26. Students can now register in the new M.Ent. and start in fall 2016.
The new M.Ent. degree complements the two degrees that are currently offered by the Technology Innovation Management (TIM) program: the Master of Applied Science (M.A.Sc.) and the Master of Engineering (M.Eng.). All three degrees are jointly offered by the Sprott School of Business and the Faculty of Engineering and Design. Carleton’s Institute of Technology Entrepreneurship and Commercialization serves as the governing body for the three TIM degrees.
“This new pathway to a master’s in Technology Innovation Management will encourage students who wish to work in business, government and policy to embark on this most valuable course of study,” said Carleton President Roseann O’Reilly Runte. “This course is extremely appropriate in the current economic environment, useful to individual scholars, and helpful to regional and global development.”
At Carleton, entrepreneurship is identified as an area of institutional strength and growth. “Sprott is all about entrepreneurship,” said Sprott School of Business Dean Jerry Tomberlin. “Carleton’s new M.Ent. degree will provide graduates with the specialized knowledge and skills to enable them to play crucial roles in the ecosystems that support and drive growth of technology ventures and, consequently, the economic growth in the Ottawa region, Canada and internationally.”
“At Carleton we do entrepreneurship, not just talk about it,” said TIM program director Tony Bailetti, who is cross appointed between the Faculty of Engineering and Design and the Sprott School of Business. “The academic programs that focus on entrepreneurship include the TIM program with its three degrees, which are available to experienced personnel with engineering, business or science undergraduate degrees; the Minor in Entrepreneurship, which is available to undergraduate students in all Carleton faculties; and the Bachelor of Commerce Entrepreneurship Concentration.”
In addition to accessing the expertise of many faculty members across campus, students pursuing the new TIM master’s degree will benefit from Lead to Win, recognized by UBI Global as one of the top 10 university-led incubators in North America; the TIM Review, a refereed journal that focuses on technology entrepreneurship and receives more than 27,000 unique online visitors each month; the Nicol Institute, a provider of internships to venture teams, each worth $8,000; the Carleton-Led Accelerator, home to student ventures with high-growth potential; Capital Entrepreneurs, a partnership among all four post-secondary institutions in Ottawa; the Ontario Centres of Excellence; BigBlueButton, the world’s No. 1 open source web conferencing system that originated in 2007 as a student project within the TIM program; the Discovery Centre’s program in community engagement; and many other resources.
Read more about this exciting new pathway in the Ottawa Business Journal.